Source: AP News
Thousands of film and television writers in the United States have launched a strike after negotiations for better working conditions with main studios and streamers failed to find an agreement.
The Writers Guild of America (WGA) union said the strike, which began after the writersâ contract expired at midnight on Tuesday, came after six weeks of failed negotiations with Netflix, Amazon, Apple and Disney, among others.
âThe WGA Negotiating Committee began this process intent on making a fair deal, but the studiosâ responses have been wholly insufficient given the existential crisis writers are facing,â the union, which represents 11,500 screenwriters, said in a statement late on Monday.
âThe companiesâ behavior has created a gig economy inside a union workforce, and their immovable stance in this negotiation has betrayed a commitment to further devaluing the profession of writing.â
Late-night shows are expected to grind to a halt immediately, while television series and movies scheduled for release later this year and beyond could face major delays.
The strike came after the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers (AMPTP), representing studios including Disney and Netflix, said negotiations had âconcluded without an agreementâ.
The strike could have potentially catastrophic effects on the US entertainment industry.
The last time Hollywood writers laid down their pens and keyboards, in 2007, the strike lasted for 100 days, costing the Los Angeles entertainment economy about $2bn.
This time, the two sides are clashing as writers demand higher pay, minimum guarantees of stable employment and a greater share of profits from the boom in streaming, while studios say they must cut costs due to economic pressures.
Picketing is expected to begin in Los Angeles at 1:00pm local time (20:00 GMT) on Tuesday, with similar demonstrations in New York, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
âTheyâre not going to break this union,â television writer David Slack, who has worked on âLaw & Orderâ and other shows, wrote on Twitter in a post retweeted by the WGA, whose account logo now reads âWriters Guild On Strikeâ.
âIf they could do without us, they would. If they could break us, they would,â Slack added. âThey canât. They wonât. #WGAStrong.â
A major source of disagreement during talks was the growing trend for TV shows to hire fewer writers, for shorter durations, to script series.
As talks collapsed on Monday, the WGA released a document showing it had called for introducing new minimum numbers of writers, and minimum durations of employment, for TV shows.
The AMPTP said WGA demands that studios hire a set number of writers âfor a specified period of time, whether needed or notâ were âprimary sticking pointsâ.
Another issue on the table is reworking the formula that calculates how writers are paid for streaming shows, which often remain on platforms like Netflix years after they were written.
For decades, writers have been paid âresidualsâ from each reuse of their material, such as television reruns or DVD sales.
With streaming, writers simply get a fixed annual payout â even if their work generates a smash hit like âBridgertonâ or âStranger Thingsâ, streamed by hundreds of millions of viewers around the world.
The WGA also wants to address the future effect of artificial intelligence on writing.
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